9.23.2014

Healthified Apple Crisp

Two dessert recipes in a week, wow aren't you lucky! My grandma has an apple tree in her front yard. It is some variety of a golden delicious apple and is honestly the most amazing apple I have ever eaten in my life. I look forward to that first cold evening in September that turns the starches in the apple into sugar and makes them incredible tasting! It is such a funny tree though, they have never sprayed it for worms, the apples are never thinned, so the tree is completely loaded with huge apples and hardly a worm hole in any of them. For as long as I can remember grandma would give us empty buckets and we would go and pick up all of the apples that had fallen on the ground. She would cut off any worm holes or bad spots and make us apple crisp and it hot out of the oven with a scoop of vanilla ice cream is so good. Sadly apple crisp is usually loaded with butter and sugar and isn't the most healthy thing to be eating. But luckily there are some good alternatives! Try this out and I think you won't even miss that extra butter and sugar!

Healthified Apple Crisp
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Total Time: 50 minutes
Servings: 8

6 cups sliced unpeeled cooking apples (6 medium)
1/4 cup frozen apple juice concentrate, thawed
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
3/4 cup old-fashioned or quick-cooking oats
1/4 cup whole wheat flour
1/3 cup packed brown sugar
1/4 cup butter or no-trans-fat 68% vegetable oil spread stick, softened
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon ground ginger
Reduced-fat vanilla ice cream, if desired 
 
  • Heat oven to 375°F. Spray 8-inch square (2-quart) glass baking dish with cooking spray. In medium bowl, mix apples, apple juice concentrate and 1/2 teaspoon cinnamon until well mixed. Spread in baking dish.
  • In same medium bowl, mix remaining ingredients until crumbly. Sprinkle over apples.
  • Bake uncovered 25 to 35 minutes or until apples are tender and topping is golden brown. Serve with ice cream.
For variety, stir 2 to 4 tablespoons ground flaxseed into the topping mixture before sprinkling over apples.

Good apples for apple crisp are the same as those that are good in apple pie, such as Braeburn, Jonathan, McIntosh or Northern Spy.

Source: Live Better America
 
 
 

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